THE NEW YORKER stood in the streets, dressed in their best clothes, and waved to us. In one village, a fat man grinned when he saw the sign on our bus, then nodded and pointed to himself, plainly meaning, "Yes, 5-1, but for Hungary." For a while, the highway ran parallel to the Danube, and its still, blue water reflected the clean white houses on the other side. Those houses were in Czechoslovakia, my natIve land. Being so close to it, yet so far away, gave me an eerie feel- ing. .l\.t regular intervals on both banks of the river stood more of the hIgh, wooden watchtowers, for the Slovaks and the Hungarians never had any love for each other and, although they are both enjoying a "people's democracy," they haven't any now. Presently, a Hungarian Army officer flagged the bus, and got on. He took an empty. seat toward the front and told the drIver to proceed. The man next to me said, "I'll bet he's going to escort us right into town." But a mile or so farther on, the officer told the driver to stop, thanked him for the ride, and got out. On the outskirts of Budapest, we were wel- comed by a group of young girls wav- ing white flowers and shouting "Béke! [Peace!]" A few minutes later, the bus drew up in front of the Béke Hotel. About a dozen other buses with Vien- nese license plates were parked outside it, and as we got out, a large crowd of Budapestians began milling around us and scanning our faces. A woman in a shabby fur coat asked me, in Ger- man, whether a certain Herr Doktor had been on my bus, and when I said I didn't know, she began to look around fran ti cally. The crowd around the Beke was so thick that I decided to go to the Hotel Astoria, where I had stayed on a previ- ous trip, and try to get a room there. Several ralllshackle taxis rattled by, but they were all occupied, so I boarded a streetcar. It was jammed with people, all of whom were talking soccer. A man standing next to me asked me If I could sell him a ticket to the game. The stadi- um had been sold out for several weeks, he said. There was another crowd in front of the Hotel Astoria, and it was apparent that most of its members were trying to buy or sell black-market tickets for the game; one man asked me if I wanted a good seat for two hun- dred forint-roughly seven tImes the official price-and another said he'd give me fifty for a ticket. Two security soldiers stood nearby, but they and the black-marketeers paId no attention to each other. When I reached my room it was }\ 91 J. :;. : .:- t: '" & ' --- > ), ; % ".;:: \:' ;-: : . -}.: "" !i:. ;.. ,..... \,' :.:. ""' : " , h ,. ""-:i' A '< " ..... çz t ,J; $: -'. !J <- * "';; ,s;", \ l}'" k' , á t&. .'* ',<, %' , ," 'i't* - \. ff;"'" " " lM'P{)'Rt"EO WI sse HOC 0 LA T E I ''-',A ':ß:j' .. t } ""." , .':: Q,.-'$"^ 'c ,,'. '" .. / " 1f);t . i "." \" \;\ " ,}'l!', ", .-. ' ", ',v'H .' ^ ", '"ß: iI" ..', > ,""" ", ";,, '" '\ THIS. .. FINE GENUINE IMPORTED SWISS CHOCOLATE. . . 15 VARIETIES OF MINIATURE BARS . .. GIFT PACKAGED TO SUIT EVERY TASTE . . . SPECIALLY PRICED TO SUIT ANY PURSE.... BUY , ' * '...-:- >\\ ... . ,..!.>( , } IMPORTED ? / 41 OTHER LINDT PACKAGES AT FINE STORES EVERYWHERE. SWISS CHOCOLATE M r 0 R T E .5' eRE seA COM P L\ NY! .c · 1 1 [! C H 1 H A'I t N :J ENE \\ Y (' R K '\ Y ..... o c r* ". .. J\' { '" -'- I I ;:!""" -- .is. ..... .. .,. - ,- ... I. ,. ,. .. SO NEAR by TWA... eCi PC . . . A Delightful Holiday-Land . . . A Treasure House of Wonders _ <7 . Egypt-little more than a day away from the United States, only a six hour flight from the heart of Europe-welcomes you with luxurious modern hotels . . . appealing dollar values . . . a delightful climate . . . and complete facilities for seeing the wonders of antiquity and enjoying the ways of the fascinating East. Egypt's magnificen t palaces, the colorful desert, the mosques and caravans, the Sphinx and the Pyramids, the newly discovered treasures of ancient kings. . . all are within immediate reach. . . and at reasonable expense. TW A's swift Constellations bring Egypt near. . . at low, low Sky Tourist fares! ....... I / _-: --:: ' i" - ..' """" ,," : - < .""', , -- \ " - -:L -- ,.. CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT OR TWA r::Jlu tIæ t.. . I.Y J:::::J r::..;VI TRANS WORLD AIRLINES in cooperation with EGYPTIAN STATE TOURIST OFFICE 630 Fifth Avenue, New York 20, N. Y.